Sucheng Chan
Sucheng Chan, the author of ¡§Asian Americans, an Interpretive History¡¨, is currently a professor of history and is also the chair of the Asian American Studies Program at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In 1973, she earned her Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley. Not only a scholar and a professor, Chan is also an author. Her extraordinary work as a professor and a writer helped her win in prestigious awards in the literary community, such as the 1986 Theodore Salutoes Memorial Book Award in Agricultural History, the 1987 American Historical Association Pacific Coast Branch Book Award, and the 1988 Association for Asian American Studies Outstanding Book Award. Another award Chan has received in recognition of her academic work is a Distinguished Teaching Award from the University of California at Berkeley in 1978. With so many years of experience, Chan, in my opinion, satisfied the scholarly qualifications for my writing about her book. The book ¡§Asian Americans, an Interpretive History¡¨ starts with the very beginning of time when the people from China, Japan, Korea, Philippines, and India first immigrated to the United States. Throughout this book, Chan talks about the accompl
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Asian Americans, American Euro-Americans, Americans Moreover, California Berkeley, Immigration Act, Japanese Americans, Territory September, Asian American, Book Award, Interpretive History¡¨, asian americans, asian american, book award, university california, university california berkeley, california berkeley, nineteenth century, american studies, twentieth century, ¡§asian americans interpretive, sucheng chan, asian american studies, struggles asian, struggles asian americans, americans interpretive history¡¨,
Approximate Word count = 889
Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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